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“Excellence R Us”: university research and the fetishisation of excellence

I thought readers might be interested in this cutting edge example of the sort of out of the box thinking that should define best practices for UO faculty:

PALGRAVE COMMUNICATIONS | ARTICLE OPEN

“Excellence R Us”: university research and the fetishisation of excellence

Published online

Abstract:

The rhetoric of “excellence” is pervasive across the academy. It is used to refer to research outputs as well as researchers, theory and education, individuals and organizations, from art history to zoology. But does “excellence” actually mean anything? Does this pervasive narrative of “excellence” do any good? Drawing on a range of sources we interrogate “excellence” as a concept and find that it has no intrinsic meaning in academia. Rather it functions as a linguistic interchange mechanism. To investigate whether this linguistic function is useful we examine how the rhetoric of excellence combines with narratives of scarcity and competition to show that the hyper-competition that arises from the performance of “excellence” is completely at odds with the qualities of good research. We trace the roots of issues in reproducibility, fraud, and homophily to this rhetoric. But we also show that this rhetoric is an internal, and not primarily an external, imposition. We conclude by proposing an alternative rhetoric based on soundness and capacity-building. In the final analysis, it turns out that that “excellence” is not excellent. Used in its current unqualified form it is a pernicious and dangerous rhetoric that undermines the very foundations of good research and scholarship. This article is published as part of a collection on the future of research assessment.

3 Comments

  1. Anonymous 01/23/2017

    Woah, woah, woah, hold the phone, stop the presses. Are you saying buzzwords are as empty and meaningless as we’ve all known all along?!

  2. Dog 01/23/2017

    This paper says:

    “Rather it [excellence] functions as a linguistic interchange mechanism”

    Well do does “Fuck you and the horse you rode in on”

    Can I publish a paper on that kind of interchange mechansism?

  3. Captain Nemo 01/23/2017

    Alas, there is no end to the cliches that universities use. “sustainable” and ‘inclusive”, etc. may easily be added. I prefer the UO motto. mens agitat molem.

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